Missing capacity on Hard disk

P

Paul

Using Win XP SP2 with drives formatted in NTFS.
Disk 1 is divided into two partitions each approx 19GB, using the size
manager in Powerdesk 6 shows 4.65Gb free, 10.5Gb used with a drive capacity
of 18.8 Gb. This leaves around 3.7Gb unaccounted for.
Running Norton Disk doctor shows errors under the 'Security descriptors
status' but running CHKDSK on startup fails to report or repair any
problems.
Can anyone help or suggest any programs that can check and repair NTFS
drives.

Thanks
Paul
 
M

Miss Perspicacia Tick

Paul said:
Using Win XP SP2 with drives formatted in NTFS.
Disk 1 is divided into two partitions each approx 19GB, using the size
manager in Powerdesk 6 shows 4.65Gb free, 10.5Gb used with a drive
capacity of 18.8 Gb. This leaves around 3.7Gb unaccounted for.
Running Norton Disk doctor shows errors under the 'Security
descriptors status' but running CHKDSK on startup fails to report or
repair any problems.
Can anyone help or suggest any programs that can check and repair NTFS
drives.

Thanks
Paul

And what makes you think it requires reparation? Have you accounted for the
system restore folder? The hiberfil.sys file? I doubt it...
 
P

Paul

Miss Perspicacia Tick said:
And what makes you think it requires reparation? Have you accounted for
the system restore folder? The hiberfil.sys file? I doubt it...

The hiberfil.sys file is about 0.5Gb (out of interest what is this file?)
and is accounted for in the calculations as is the pagefile.sys (0.7Gb)- not
sure about the system restore folder I can't find anything with that name.

Paul
 
B

barry

Paul said:
The hiberfil.sys file is about 0.5Gb (out of interest what is this file?)
and is accounted for in the calculations as is the pagefile.sys (0.7Gb)-
not sure about the system restore folder I can't find anything with that
name.

Paul

hiberfil.sys is the hibernation file. it writes to it when you hibernate
your pc. if you dont use it, turn it off, and gain the disk space back.
sys restore is hidden away frmo prying eyes. its in system volume
niformation off the root. you'll need to unhide operating system files, and
give yourself permission to access it. But to be safe, i recommend that you
don't....
 
K

kovik

you should see how much space is assigned to system restore and hibernation.
You can see that on
your system and screen properties. When running chkdsk it tells you which
file and address report is sent to.

It's probably your disk has assigned some space to processes that you are
not using, like above said.

kovik



"Paul" <[email protected]> escribió en el mensaje

Miss Perspicacia Tick said:
And what makes you think it requires reparation? Have you accounted for
the system restore folder? The hiberfil.sys file? I doubt it...

The hiberfil.sys file is about 0.5Gb (out of interest what is this file?)
and is accounted for in the calculations as is the pagefile.sys (0.7Gb)- not
sure about the system restore folder I can't find anything with that name.

Paul
 
D

Damo

You're sure you partitioned the full size of the disk?
That Miss Perspicacia Tick is one cranky gal (no offence!)
Damo
 

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